The Distribution of the Tax Burden

The Distribution of the Tax Burden
Author: Edgar K. Browning
Publisher: Studies in Tax Policy
Total Pages: 104
Release: 1979
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Monograph on taxation in the USA - seeks tax reform in the national level tax system which is highly progressive to make tax collection equally distributed, makes use of economic theory on taxes and explains data sources, research methodology, data analysis and statistical computing, and covers federal, state and local tax burdens, fiscal policy, income distribution, income tax, consumption tax and corporation tax. Graphs, references and statistical tables.

The Changing Distribution of Federal Taxes, 1975-1990

The Changing Distribution of Federal Taxes, 1975-1990
Author: Richard Kasten
Publisher:
Total Pages: 104
Release: 1987
Genre: Tax incidence
ISBN:

I. Introduction -- II. Overview of federal revenues and federal tax legislation, 1975-1990 -- III. Who pays the taxes? -- IV. Measuring family income -- V. Distribution of federal taxes in 1977, 1984, and 1988 -- VI. Effect of tax law changes on the distribution of federal taxes -- Appendix A. Additional detail on the distribution of income -- Appendix B. Additonal detail on the distribution of federal taxes -- Appendix C. Gini coefficients and Suits indexes.

Crs Report for Congress

Crs Report for Congress
Author: Jane G. Gravelle
Publisher: BiblioGov
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2013-11
Genre:
ISBN: 9781293256749

Distributional issues often lie at the center of tax policy debates. Distributional analysis may address several issues: How should the tax burden be distributed or, are progressive (increasing as a share of income as income rises) taxes justified? What is the estimated distribution of the current system? How does a particular proposal change that distribution? Unlike many analyses that study optimal behavior related to allocative issues and economic efficiency, economic analysis cannot be used to answer the questions of how the tax burden should be distributed. Such an answer would depend on social preferences. Economic analysis can, however, identify trade-offs and frame the issue analytically. For example, a number of plausible answers to this question could justify progressive tax structures. Methodological issues, such as the income classifier, the unit of analysis, and assumptions regarding incidence all affect the estimates of the distribution of the current tax burden. Yet all show a similar qualitative result: the federal tax system is progressive throughout its range, although it tends to get much flatter at the top. This pattern is primarily due to the individual income tax, which is quite progressive, and actually provides subsidies at lower income levels. The other major tax is ...

Distribution of the Tax Burden Across Individuals

Distribution of the Tax Burden Across Individuals
Author: Jane Gravelle
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2004
Genre:
ISBN:

This report discusses in the first section different philosophies about how the tax burden should be distributed, and what those philosophies imply for the shape of the tax system. In particular, it addresses the question of the justifications for a progressive tax system (one where the share of income collected as a tax rises as income rises). This section is presented for the interested reader, but is not a necessary preliminary to examining the analysis in the second section, which presents estimates of the distribution of the federal and total U.S. tax burden. The third section of the report discusses the measures that can be used to characterize the distributional effects of tax changes.